Perceived vs. observed mHealth behavior: A naturalistic investigation of tracking apps and daily movement

Author:

Mao Chang (Molly)1,Bayer Joseph B.23ORCID,Ross Morgan Q.ORCID,Rhee Lisa4,Le Huyen T. K.5,Mount Jerry6,Chang Hsiu-Chi,Chang Yung-Ju7,Hedstrom Alexander,Hovick Shelly R.4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Communication Studies, Marshall University, USA

2. School of Communication, Ohio State University, USA;

3. Translational Data Analytics Institute, Ohio State University, USA

4. School of Communication, Ohio State University, USA

5. Department of Geography, Ohio State University, USA

6. IIHR—Engineering and Hydroscience, University of Iowa, USA

7. Department of Computer Science, National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University

Abstract

Research on mHealth apps provides mixed evidence regarding their effectiveness for behavior change, including physical activity. Synthesizing prior perspectives, we test predictors of tracking app and physical activity intentions (Study 1; n = 658) and their links to everyday mobility (Study 2; n = 418; n = 27,617,440 observations). Study 1 showed that individuals have overlapping perceptions of tracking apps and physical activity. Taking a naturalistic mobile sensing approach, Study 2 found that tracking app and physical activity intentions predicted self-reported physical activity – but not logged movement (i.e., walking, cycling, or running). Tracking app use was not related to the level of logged movement in daily life. However, participants who regularly used tracking apps were more likely to view them as impactful, suggesting that daily mHealth app use is related to perceived (vs. observed) behavior change. Together, our studies illuminate how perceptions of mobility and mobile media – and their effects – can become intertwined in users’ minds.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Computer Networks and Communications,Media Technology,Communication

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